Waste and/or hazardous liquid containment and collection system
10174493 ยท 2019-01-08
Inventors
Cpc classification
C02F1/40
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B01D17/10
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B08B17/025
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D17/0214
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B60S3/044
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
C02F1/001
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
International classification
E03F5/04
FIXED CONSTRUCTIONS
C02F1/40
CHEMISTRY; METALLURGY
B08B17/02
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
B01D17/00
PERFORMING OPERATIONS; TRANSPORTING
Abstract
A liquid cleaning system rests on a surface having a non-porous material covering and a drain. A lower plate layer and an upper plate layer each have runners arranged in a grid. The lower plate layer rests upon the surface and the upper plate layer rests upon the lower plate layer offset at an angle with respect to the grid of the lower plate layer. An upper layer covers the upper plate layer and has a plurality of holes for the passage of fluids into the liquid cleaning system. As liquid enters the liquid cleaning system through the holes, the liquid traverses the grid of the lower plate layer and the grid of the upper plate layer flowing towards the drain, and contaminants within the liquid collect within the grid of the lower plate layer and the grid of the upper plate layer.
Claims
1. A liquid cleaning system resting on a surface, the surface having a drain, the liquid cleaning system comprising: a non-porous material covering the surface except for the drain; a lower plate layer and an upper plate layer comprising runners arranged in a grid; the lower plate layer resting upon the non-porous material; the upper plate layer resting upon the lower plate layer, the grid of the upper plate layer offset at an angle with respect to the grid of the lower plate layer; and an upper layer covering the upper plate layer, the upper layer having a plurality of holes for the passage of the liquid into the upper plate layer and lower plate layer; wherein as the liquid that has entered the liquid cleaning system through the plurality of holes traverses the grid of the lower plate layer and the grid of the upper plate layer flows towards the drain, contaminants within the liquid collect within the grid of the lower plate layer and the grid of the upper plate layer.
2. The liquid cleaning system of claim 1, in which the liquid comprises water with pollutants and oils, the oils having a lower specific gravity than water get trapped in the upper layer, and the pollutants having a higher specific gravity than water get trapped in the lower plate layers and the water exits through the drain.
3. The liquid cleaning system of claim 2, further comprising a separation tank fluidly connected to the drain, the separation tank further removing some of the pollutants and some of the oils that have higher or lower specific gravities than the water through a weir system.
4. The liquid cleaning system of claim 1, further comprising walls surrounding the lower plate layer, the upper plate layer and the upper layer.
5. The liquid cleaning system of claim 1, wherein the lower plate layer and the upper plate layer are textured geo-membranes made by co-extruding textured, high density polyethylene.
6. The liquid cleaning system of claim 1, wherein the non-porous material is a water-resistant coating.
7. The liquid cleaning system of claim 1, wherein the non-porous material is a layer of reinforced polypropylene.
8. A liquid cleaning system comprising: a lower layer that is substantially non-porous except for a drain; a lower plate layer and an upper plate layer comprising runners arranged in a grid; the lower plate layer resting upon the lower layer; the upper plate layer resting upon the lower plate layer, such that the grid of the upper plate layer is offset at an angle with respect to the grid of the lower plate layer; an upper layer covering the upper plate layer, the upper layer having a plurality of holes for the passage of fluids; and walls surrounding the lower plate layer, the upper plate layer, and the upper layer.
9. The liquid cleaning system of claim 8, wherein the lower plate layer and the upper plate layer are textured geo-membranes made by co-extruding textured, high density polyethylene.
10. The liquid cleaning system of claim 8, wherein the lower layer is made of reinforced polypropylene.
11. The liquid cleaning system of claim 8, wherein the lower layer is a water resistant coating.
12. The liquid cleaning system of claim 8, further comprising a separation tank that receives a water, remaining oils, and pollutants from the drain and further removes some of the pollutants and some of the remaining oils that have higher or lower specific gravities than the water through a weir system.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS
(1) The invention can be best understood by those having ordinary skill in the art by reference to the following detailed description when considered in conjunction with the accompanying drawings in which:
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
(7) Reference will now be made in detail to the presently preferred embodiments of the invention, examples of which are illustrated in the accompanying drawings. Throughout the following detailed description, the same reference numerals refer to the same elements in all figures.
(8) Referring to
(9) In the process of washing machinery such as vehicles, various chemicals and oils are dislodged from the machinery or vehicles such as gasoline, oils, salts, car wax, tar, etc. Many municipalities prohibit drain water from machinery cleaning or car washes to enter the sewerage and/or drain water system, as these chemicals and oils would then find their way to rivers, streams, and other bodies of water, adding pollutants to such. On the other hand, it is desirable by many to have a clean vehicle, especially in geographies where ice and snow removal include using salts to melt the ice and snow being that such salts are corrosive in nature. Many people like to have clean vehicles and, to enhance the salability of vehicles; automobile dealerships often wash the entire inventory of vehicles on a periodic interval to assure that the fleet of vehicles is appealing to potential buyers.
(10) Many people wash their vehicles at home, in their driveway, using a garden hose and bucket, releasing small amounts of pollutants into the storm drain system, which eventually leads to the above mentioned bodies of water. Many others wash their vehicles in car wash facilities which typically have bays equipped with a high pressure source of water/soap and a drain to wash away excess water and dirt. Washing of vehicles in car wash facilities is preferred, in that, it is more cost-effective to process the contaminated water from the washing process than processing the contaminated water at everybody's home.
(11) In addition to cleaning of the waste water, some localities with limited average rainfall and many localities during drought conditions, prohibit washing of vehicles at homes and offices. In such, car washing facilities are required to recycle water so as to use as little as possible. As one could imagine, it is not good to wash a vehicle with unfiltered water from previous washed vehicles. Using such contaminated water results in a dirty vehicle, even after cleaning. Using contaminated water also results in fine grain grit being power-sprayed onto the vehicle which, besides slowly removing waxes and paint from the vehicle, this grit also clogs the high-pressure spray nozzle, requiring frequent cleaning or replacement of the nozzle.
(12) To facilitate recycling of the waste water from the above described situations, the disclosed waste and/or hazardous liquid containment and collection system includes one or more separation and/or filtering portions, each independent of the other and useful with or without the others. The first such separation and/or filter section is shown in
(13) As contaminated fluids with solids (e.g. water, solids, and pollutants) fall onto the upper layer 20, the contaminated fluids pass through a plurality of holes 22 in the upper layer 20, filtering out large debris such as stones, paper, etc.
(14) The next two layers are plate layers 30/40 are made of geo-membranes or membranes arranged in a grids or similar geometric pattern. The upper plate layer 30 is set over the lower plate layer 40. In a preferred embodiment, the upper plate layer 30 is offset at an angle with respect to the lower plate layer 40. Although any angle is anticipated, an example of one angle is 45 degrees, in that, lines of the grid of the upper plate layer 30 are at 45 degree angles with respect to lines of the grid of the lower plate layer 40. By arranging the plate layers 30/40 in this offset angle, as shown in
(15) After some number of uses, the upper layer 20 is lifted and the oil is vacuumed out of the plate layers 30/40 for proper disposal and recycling.
(16) As an example, the plate layers 30/40 are textured geo-membranes made by co-extruding textured, high density polyethylene providing chemical resistance and sufficient load carrying abilities to support the weight of most vehicles.
(17) Any impermeable layer 50 is anticipated such as a reinforced polypropylene as known for use as a liner for containment ponds.
(18) Referring to
(19) Referring to
(20) After falling through the drain 149, the run-off, dirty water is further processed by separation tank 150. In this exemplary separation tank 150, the dirty water enters into a first compartment 152. As the first compartment 152 fills, the now cleaner water flows over a weir 153 into a second compartment 154. In such, contaminates that have a higher specific gravity than water (e.g., sand, metal) settle to the bottom of the first compartment 152 and the water and contaminates that have a lower specific gravity than water (e.g., remaining oils, plastics) flow over the weir 153 and into the second compartment 154. In the second compartment 154, contaminates that have a lower specific gravity than water tend to float to the top 156 of the second compartment 154 while the, now, reclaimed water exits from the bottom of the second compartment 154 under a partition 157 (e.g., an inverted weir) and into an exit compartment 158, where the reclaimed water exits, for example, into the sewerage drain 200. As with the plate layers 30/40, after some number of uses, debris, sand, contaminates are vacuumed out of the compartments 152/154/158 and disposed or recycled according to accepted practices.
(21) In
(22) In
(23) Water (substantially clean water) is then drawn from the bottom of the second separation tank 320. By drawing the water from the bottom of the second separation tank 320, the second separation tank 320 serves as a reservoir, in that, the system will operate and not need refilling from the municipal water supply 110 until the second separation tank 320 is substantially depleted. This requires fewer operations to add water from the supply. In some embodiments (not shown), the supply valve 324 is automatically operated when an electronic device (e.g. a float or other device) determines that the water level in the second separation tank 320 is below a certain level.
(24) Equivalent elements can be substituted for the ones set forth above such that they perform in substantially the same manner in substantially the same way for achieving substantially the same result.
(25) It is believed that the system and method as described and many of its attendant advantages will be understood by the foregoing description. It is also believed that it will be apparent that various changes may be made in the form, construction and arrangement of the components thereof without departing from the scope and spirit of the invention or without sacrificing all of its material advantages. The form herein before described being merely exemplary and explanatory embodiment thereof. It is the intention of the following claims to encompass and include such changes.